Craigflower Manor House National Historic Site of Canada

Formally Recognized:
1964/10/27

Other Name(s)

Craigflower Manor House National Historic Site of CanadaCraigflower Manor HouseManoir Craigflower

Links and documents

n/a

Construction Date(s)

1853/01/01 to 1856/01/01

Listed on the Canadian Register:
2007/06/18

Statement of Significance

Description of Historic Place

The Craigflower Manor House was built between 1853 and 1856, mainly from materials cut, hewn and milled in the vicinity. It is a two-storey timber frame building with a moderately-pitched gable roof, end chimneys, and a classically-inspired symmetrical five-bay plan with a pedimented central entrance. The manor house occupies a parcel of land overlooking the Gorge Waterway in the Greater Victoria district. The designation refers to the house on its legal lot.

Heritage Value

Craigflower Manor House was designated a national historic site in 1964. Built for the Puget’s Sound Agricultural Company, it is a fine example of early domestic architecture in Western Canada.

As the residence of bailiff Kenneth MacKenzie, it was the focus of Craigflower Farm, the oldest of four farms on Vancouver Island whose employment of colonists marked the transition from fur trade to settlement on the northwest coast. This transitional stage is reflected vividly in the design of the Manor House, which combines Hudson’s Bay Company construction systems with Scottish architectural influences and craftsmanship adapted to the use of local materials.

Character-Defining Elements

The key elements relating to the heritage value of this site include:

-its site, defined as the land bordered by Admirals and Craigflower Roads, and the Gorge Waterway, and the prominent position of the house on a grassy knoll;-the unobstructed view of the house from Admirals and Craigflower Roads, Craigflower Bridge and the waterway;-its materials and forms, all of which are expressive of a significant phase in the historical development of western Canada, including: Hudson’s Bay Company post-and-groove framing on ground floor and mortice-and-tenoned timber frame system on second floor, Georgian five-bay plan, pedimented entrance, moulded window heads and window pediments, the front door and its hardware, gable detailing, fenestration, rough-sawn horizontal clapboard siding, brick chimneys;-central hall interior floor plan and surviving historic interior features and fixtures.